The Wit That Won Hearts — Class 8 English (Poorvi)
"Wit is the rarest quality to be met with among people of education." — Lord Chesterfield
1. About the Chapter
This is the opening chapter of the brand-new NCERT Class 8 English textbook Poorvi (2025-26 onwards). It launches Unit 1 (Wit and Wisdom) by exploring how wit — quick, clever, and good-natured intelligence — can win hearts and solve difficult situations.
Key Themes
- The nature of WIT (vs humour, vs sarcasm)
- Famous witty exchanges from history
- Using wit positively
- Indian heritage of wit (Birbal, Tenali Rama, Mulla Nasiruddin)
Why This Chapter
The new Poorvi textbook (NEP 2020) emphasises VALUES through stories. Wit, when used with kindness, is a powerful tool for human connection.
2. What is Wit?
Definition
Wit = quick, clever, intelligent expression — often unexpected — that delights and instructs.
Wit vs Humour vs Sarcasm
- WIT: clever wordplay or clever reasoning (mental sharpness)
- HUMOUR: anything that makes you laugh (broader)
- SARCASM: ironic remark, sometimes biting
The best wit:
- Comes quickly (timing matters)
- Is original (not borrowed)
- Is kind (not cruel)
- Reveals a deeper truth
3. Famous Witty Exchanges
Birbal and Akbar
Birbal was a minister of Mughal Emperor Akbar. Known for his quick wit, he resolved many problems.
Story 1 — The deepest well Akbar drew a line and asked Birbal: "Make this line shorter without erasing any part of it." Birbal drew a LONGER line beside it. Now the first line was shorter — without being erased!
Story 2 — The crow's count Akbar asked: "How many crows are there in our kingdom?" Birbal said: "Exactly 95,463." "How do you know?" Akbar asked. "If there are more, some are visiting from neighbouring kingdoms. If fewer, some have gone visiting. So your majesty must accept my number."
Tenali Rama and Krishnadevaraya
Tenali Rama was a witty poet at the court of King Krishnadevaraya (Vijayanagar Empire, 16th century).
Story — Sweet revenge A pompous scholar challenged Tenali Rama to a debate. Tenali had been told the scholar liked sweets. He brought sweet-smelling jasmine. The scholar stopped to smell — and Tenali poured pepper. As the scholar coughed, Tenali declared victory: "If a debate makes you sneeze, what would my arguments do?"
Mulla Nasiruddin
A legendary witty figure from Persia/Central Asia, known across the Islamic world.
Story — Donkey returning Once Mulla was riding his donkey backwards. People asked, "Why are you sitting backwards?" Mulla replied, "I am not sitting backwards. The donkey is facing the wrong way!"
Mahatma Gandhi
Gandhi was famous for his quick wit, often disarming critics.
Story — Civilisation Asked by a Western journalist, "Mr Gandhi, what do you think of Western civilisation?" Gandhi replied: "I think it would be a good idea."
4. Why Wit Wins Hearts
It Diffuses Tension
A witty remark can defuse an angry situation — letting both sides see the lighter side.
It Reveals Intelligence
Quick, original wit shows the speaker has thought deeply and quickly.
It Builds Connections
Shared laughter is a bond. People remember those who made them think AND laugh.
It Conveys Truth Indirectly
Sometimes wit can say what direct speech cannot — without offending.
It Wins Influence
Diplomats, leaders, teachers — all benefit from well-timed wit.
5. Examples of Modern Wit
Famous Quote — Mark Twain
"It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt."
Famous Quote — Winston Churchill
At a dinner, a woman said: "If you were my husband, I'd put poison in your tea." Churchill: "Madam, if I were your husband, I'd drink it."
Indian Modern — A.R. Rahman
A journalist asked Rahman: "How did you become so successful?" Rahman smiled: "I just keep showing up — and don't take myself too seriously."
6. How to Develop Wit
Read Widely
- Read jokes, witty essays, sharp dialogue
- Authors like Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde, R.K. Narayan
Observe Carefully
- Notice patterns, contradictions, ironies
- Wit often comes from unexpected connections
Practise Wordplay
- Puns, double meanings, rhymes
- Indian languages have rich traditions (Slesha in Sanskrit)
Listen First
- Good wit responds to what was just said
- Listening carefully helps timing
Be Kind
- Wit should illuminate, not wound
- Sarcasm and cruelty are not true wit
7. Activities Suggested by the Chapter
Activity 1: Birbal Story
Read one Birbal story aloud. Discuss in groups: what made it witty?
Activity 2: Class Wit-fest
Each student shares a witty exchange they have witnessed.
Activity 3: Writing
Write a short paragraph imagining how YOU would respond wittily to a difficult question.
Activity 4: Wit vs Sarcasm
Make a list of 5 examples each. Discuss why kindness matters.
8. Important Vocabulary
- WIT: clever, quick intelligence
- REPARTEE: quick, clever reply
- PUN: play on words with double meanings
- IRONY: meaning the opposite of what is said
- SARCASM: bitter or wounding irony
- HUMOUR: anything funny
- EPIGRAM: short, witty saying
9. Indian Wit Tradition
India has one of the richest traditions of wit:
- Birbal (Mughal court, 16th century)
- Tenali Rama (Vijayanagar court, 16th century)
- Mulla Nasiruddin (originally Persian, beloved across Indian Muslims)
- Chanakya (4th century BCE, witty political adviser)
- Sanskrit literature: rich in 'shlesha' (double meaning)
- Modern: R.K. Laxman cartoons, Annie Zaidi, modern stand-up comics
Every region of India has its own witty folk figures — wit transcends class, caste, language.
10. Worked Examples
Example 1: Identify wit
"I am not afraid of death. I just don't want to be there when it happens." — Woody Allen This is WITTY because: contrasts fear of death with comic acceptance; clever paradox.
Example 2: Birbal's wisdom
What was Birbal's trick to 'shorten' the line?
- He drew a LONGER LINE beside it. Now the first line was relatively shorter — without erasing anything. Clever reframing.
Example 3: Sarcasm vs Wit
Compare:
- SARCASM: "Oh wonderful, you broke my favourite cup." (hurtful)
- WIT: "I see we've made a new piece of art." (gentle, redirects)
Wit lifts the mood; sarcasm wounds.
11. Conclusion
'The Wit That Won Hearts' opens the new Poorvi textbook by celebrating one of humanity's most delightful qualities. Wit is a gift — when paired with kindness, it can:
- Resolve conflicts
- Build relationships
- Express truth gently
- Bring joy
India has thousands of years of wit traditions — from Birbal to modern comics. As you study Poorvi, remember: words are powerful. Wit channels words into wisdom and warmth.
Master wit by reading widely, listening carefully, and choosing kindness over cleverness alone. The best wit doesn't just MAKE people laugh — it WINS their hearts.
